Younger readers may not remember this,teacher and student sex video but Google Maps wasn't always the default way to look up how to get places.
Wayback in the day, people would use paper maps, but there was an interim period for a while where a lot of people used a website called MapQuest. Well, MapQuest is not only still around, but we've actually got a reason to use it in 2025. Sort of. If you go to a special Gulf of Mexico-themed part of MapQuest, you can type in anything you want, and it'll generate a map that renames the Gulf of Mexico after whatever you typed in. For example:
There's not really a lot more to say about this. You can name it whatever you want, which is also official U.S. government policy these days. All of this was brought on by the fact that some people have apparently decided the Gulf of Mexico is called something else now, and Google Maps actually complied and changed the name in that app. Apple did the same thing, too.
Have fun, folks.
Topics Google
(Editor: {typename type="name"/})
Best speaker deal: Save $30 on the JBL Clip 5
Mickey Mouse is finally, kind of, becoming public domain
W. H. Auden Was a Messy Roommate by Seamus Perry
Staff Picks: Cinema, Sebald, and Small Surprises by The Paris Review
NYT Connections Sports Edition hints and answers for April 17: Tips to solve Connections #206
A Poem Is Not a Frontal Assault: An Interview with Jane Hirshfield by Ilya Kaminsky
Harry Mathews’s Drifts and Returns by Daniel Levin Becker
Best speaker deal: Save $30 on the JBL Clip 5
Staff Picks: Menace, Machines, and Muhammad Ali by The Paris Review
Trump tariff news: See the latest impacts on consumer tech
How to watch VT vs. Tulane football livestreams: kickoff time, streaming deals, and more
接受PR>=1、BR>=1,流量相当,内容相关类链接。